Thank you!! BTW, Kiara, have you ever checked what the going price it for one of the horses? You also need to be practical - those feathered fetlocks don't work well in mud or snow. If you are just going to show that is different, but for riding and actually working all that long hair would get in the way IME. They are apparently known for the high knee action and I wonder how smooth their ride is at any faster gaits. Even within breeds there is a difference in their gaits and how smooth they are. Queen was not a show horse - she wasn't trained, but she trained me. We grew up together and to this day I get tears in my eyes when I think about her. I was 14 when I got her and 43 when she died. Drum and the stallions were all really trained - they knew all the signals. In fact Drum got so when in the show ring, we found him listening to the announcer for what gait he was changing to which isn't good.